Edited David Larrea (Oct. 10, 2014 04:52:53 AM)
Edited Michael Shiver (Oct. 10, 2014 09:21:33 AM)
Originally posted by Michael Grimsley:
Arthur has committed a GRV by resolving a delayed trigger that doesn’t exist, and Nancy has committed FtMGS by allowing him to do this.
Originally posted by Chris Nowak:Michael Grimsley
Arthur has committed a GRV by resolving a delayed trigger that doesn’t exist, and Nancy has committed FtMGS by allowing him to do this.
Do we really consider “resolving a non-existent trigger” an error in itself?
Originally posted by Michael Grimsley:Nancy controlled the original ability which created the delayed trigger. Since she “created” the delayed trigger controlled by the wrong player, you could argue that she's committed a GRV by resolving the original ability incorrectly.
The active player's actions demonstrated that he thought he was resolving a trigger and the non-active player allowing it demonstrated that she thought there was a trigger there as well, since the trigger was not actually on the stack, it is non-existent. This is the GRV/FtMGS infraction.
Am I on the wrong track here?
Originally posted by Jacob Milicic:
Optionally, we can avoid a rewind if no other creatures were attacking and simply return the Towershell to exile and proceed from Combat Damage.
Originally posted by Nicholas Brown:Jacob Milicic
Optionally, we can avoid a rewind if no other creatures were attacking and simply return the Towershell to exile and proceed from Combat Damage.
What part of the Policy supports this partial fix?
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